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Obama Can Win Big with FDR Formula
Franklin D. Roosevelt wasn’t always “Franklin D. Roosevelt.”
As President Barack Obama delivers his State of Union Address on Tuesday and devises his reelection strategy, he should understand the implications of this statement and act on them. Whether this election will have major consequences for our future and what Obama’s place in history will be could both depend on the willingness of the president and Democrats to do so.
Obama and his advisers are likely tempted to opt for a stand-pat reelection effort because of the improving unemployment numbers. That may be enough to get him reelected. But it won’t be the sort of transformative election that could secure his place in history as a great president — which acting on that FDR statement could achieve.
To understand why, look to the seemingly schizophrenic results of two recent polls. A December Gallup Poll found that 64 percent of Americans see Big Government as the nation’s largest threat, while only 26 percent see Big Business as the greatest threat.
A month earlier, however, 75 percent of Americans surveyed in a Wall Street Journal/NBC poll said that “the current economic structure of the country is out of balance and favors a very small proportion of the rich over the rest of the country,” the “power of major banks and corporations” needs to be reduced and the rich should not receive tax breaks. Sixty percent strongly agreed with this. Only 12 percent disagreed, 6 percent strongly.
How can overwhelming majorities believe both that the power of Big Business needs to be reduced and Big Government is a greater threat than Big Business?
The answer is in another response in that November poll: 74 percent said Obama has “fallen short” of expectations in “improving oversight of Wall Street and the banks.” Only 18 percent said he lived up to expectations. By 66 percent to 29 percent, respondents said Obama hasn’t lived up to their expectations in “standing up to Big Business and special interests.”
So the reason most Americans fear Big Government more than Big Business is that the former has failed to control the latter — and instead assumed the role of enabler.
If Obama were to stand up to big business, the public’s view of government — and him — could improve rapidly.
That brings us back to the statement above about Roosevelt and how it affects the 2012 elections — since high, if declining, unemployment is probably the greatest obstacle to Obama’s reelection. No president for more than 70 years has been reelected with unemployment above 7.5 percent — as it is likely to be in November.
If we go a little further back, however, unemployment was at 16.9 percent in 1936. FDR was reelected that year with 60.8 percent of the popular vote, carrying all but two states and winning the Electoral College vote 523 to 8.
But the Roosevelt who won that landslide — despite an unemployment rate nearly twice what it is now — was not the FDR of 1932, or even 1933. He was the man we now think of as “Franklin D. Roosevelt” — a role he took on in 1935 and 1936.
Prior to his 1932 election, Roosevelt was famously described by Walter Lippmann as “an excessively cautious politician” who was “no crusader,” “no enemy of entrenched privilege.” That characterization seems to fit President Obama so far — even if it did not fit 2007-08 Candidate Obama.
At the start of his presidency, FDR also sought consensus — and got a great deal of it. In his inaugural address, he denounced the “money changers,” but he was simultaneously consulting with leading financiers about how to solve the banking crisis. Roosevelt didn’t turn on the banks, even though there was overwhelming public opposition to them.
“The president drove the money changers out of the Capitol on March 4,” Rep. William Lemke of North Dakota complained, “and they were all back on the 9th.”
There were important accomplishments during the first two years of the Roosevelt administration — as there were in the first two years of the Obama administration. But by 1935, many Americans began thinking that the New Deal was not doing enough to restore balance in the economy by curbing the power of the rich, the big banks and corporations.
It was progressive agitation, union activities and popular movements (collectively identified as “Thunder on the Left”) in 1934 and 1935 — combined with FDR’s belated realization that Big Business wasn’t going to play ball with him — that ultimately led Roosevelt to shift to more progressive policies and proposals.
The American Liberty League, formed by business and conservative opponents of the New Deal, was established in 1934 “to combat radicalism, preserve property rights [and] uphold and preserve the Constitution.” These backers were the Koch brothers of that era, trying to convince Americans that the president was a socialist.
Always a savvy pragmatist, FDR finally realized it was impossible to compromise with those who refuse to compromise. He also saw that he needed to move left to catch up with his “followers,” who were demanding more vigorous action on behalf of the vast majority of Americans struggling in the Great Depression.
Roosevelt was “leading from behind.” He abandoned consensus and compromise, and instead cast his lot with the poor, unions and minorities, and against the corporate and financial interests — becoming the “Franklin D. Roosevelt” we know today.
FDR launched his 1936 reelection campaign by warning against a dictatorship by the over-privileged and declaring that private enterprise had become “too private. It became privileged enterprise, not free enterprise.”
“These economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the institutions of America,” he said, expressing sentiments that could resonate now. “What they really complain of is that we seek to take away their power.”
Running against economic royalists, Roosevelt won reelection in one of the largest landslides in U.S. history. The Democrats, moreover, won 77 percent of the House seats and increased their hold on the Senate to 79 percent.
As 2012 begins, such a resounding victory for Obama and the Democrats looks impossible. Whether it is depends on which past reelection campaign recipe Obama decides to follow.
Emulating Harry S. Truman’s 1948 run against the “Do Nothing” Republican Congress is a formula that is likely to succeed. But, by itself, it is unlikely to produce a major, realigning victory.
But if Obama instead picks up FDR’s 1936 cookbook, he could find that the ingredients are available for a Democratic landslide. The November poll shows that, by 76 percent to 12 percent, Americans oppose the economic policies championed by the Republicans and want the economic policies that progressives advocate: “We are the 76 percent who realize that we are part of the 99 percent.”
For their part, Republicans seem to be declaring something like: “We are the 12 percent that sides with the 1 percent.”
Republicans are falling all over one another in a mad — literally mad — rush to align themselves with the 12 percent who stand with the rich, banks and corporations. Yet two-thirds to three-quarters of Americans are disappointed that Obama hasn’t done enough to oppose those same interests.
Can Obama catch up to his “followers” — as FDR did in 1936?
To assure that Obama reprises FDR’s successful 1936 strategy, progressives must pressure the president and his party to run a campaign pledging to implement policies in line with what an overwhelming majority of Americans say they want.
There is a famous story of a union leader who met with FDR to outline the arguments for a progressive program. “I agree with everything you said,” Roosevelt responded. “Now go out and make me do it.”
Conservatives used to say: “Let Reagan be Reagan.” The progressive slogan today should be: “MAKE Obama Be ‘Obama’” — the man we imagined him to be when we elected him.
That’s what three-quarters of the American people want. If Obama and Democrats listen, they might win a historic victory this year.
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107 Comments so far
Show AllThe parallels with the Great Depression are very apt, and this author does a good job presenting them. Roosevelt was indeed not FDR until the public forced him to assume that role. I no longer think Obama has the cojones to stand up to big business, but OWS has already done immeasurable good in shifting the discussion. You see it when even the Republican candidates are complaining about Romneys behavior at Bain Capital.
I never thought I would say this, if it comes down to it I might vote for Gingrich over Obama, since I actually find him to the left of Obama on issues (like government oversight of business) I care about. The conservative complaint of Gingrich is that, by his actions, he's just too liberal, but I hope he's their nominee because he'll shift left once that happens (to win the broad vote). If OWS can keep up the pressure, don't be surprised to find BOTH candidates complaining about Citizens United. The difference is that Gingrich, unlikeable though he is, would actually do something about it. I think Obama is pretty spineless, when it comes down to it. Like FDR, he'll yell 'make me do it' during the campaign, but if reelected, he'll be 'yelling' that to WallStreet, and taking dictation from them again.
Gingrich?!? Or is this more satire? You been drinkin' what you brewin', ubrew?
If you plan to vote, why not Rocky Anderson or Jill Stein?
They have no respect for third parties.
My thought also. If unhappy with both parties, why vote for either one?
Your right to vote is actually an obligation. You vote or you surrender what is left of your (deep-sixed) democracy. I would vote for Gingrich if it came down to it because his is a true independent (even feistily independent) voice. Obama's is a establishment voice (obvious to all, by now) and so, irredeemably, is Romney's. Don't get me wrong: these are all nice people (except Gingrich, who is probably an 8sshole). No, I'm quite certain I would vote for Gingrich. The democracy is a farce, why not vote for the court jester? Whatever else he promises, Gingrich promises to not leave the White House the same way he got it: I'm certain of that. Can Obama or Romney say the same? (as far as I'm concerned, they are twins).
How much did they pay you to shill for the Gingrinch?
Nothing. There's no difference between the (sold out) parties, and our winner-take-all democracy doesn't allow an easy path for a third party, so ya dances with them whats brung ya. When OWS finally gets so mad that we organically strike for campaign finance reform, THEN I'll take a stand with them, but until then, I'll vote for Stephen Colbert if its possible. The democracy is a joke. However, Gingrich is no joke, he's much more liberal than he's currently trying to paint himself, and would use the bully-pulpit as Obama has been too timid to do. It's important to have someone in there who is both smart and willing to use the pulpit for what it was intended to, and Gingrich is both. Obama is also smart, but he's just too timid to use his office as he must in these troubling times. I must say the content of his SOTU speech is encouraging. I'll be listening this year, but have a bad feeling it'll be a repeat of 2008: he'll give all the right signals and, if reelected, go back to playing golf with his pals on WallStreet.
"and our winner-take-all democracy doesn't allow an easy path for a third party"
The excuse that's always used to disrespect and patronize third parties.
"When OWS finally gets so mad that we organically strike for campaign finance reform, THEN I'll take a stand with them"
If everyone follows that advice, then OWS will never grow. Thank God it's not completely so.
"Gingrich is no joke, he's much more liberal than he's currently trying to paint himself"
Gingrich hasn't changed much.
"Obama is also smart, but he's just too timid to use his office as he must in these troubling times."
Obama ain't timid. He knows what he's doing.
The headline should read "Obama Can Win Big if the Public Swallows his Line of BS Again." I find him even more repugnant to watch than W.
I can't stand the sight or sound of Obama or Hillary.
I always had a similar reaction to seeing or hearing Bush or Cheney.
I will have to say that watching the supposedly cute video that Bush produced for the correspondents dinner, where he pretended to be looking under the desk in the Oval Office, and behind the couch for "those missing WMDs" made me physically ill, and I wanting to rip his heart out, when I thought of all the working-class American kids and Iraqi civilians that that bastard caused to die.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9EbssUgHj4
A very very special spot in hell has to be reserved for Bush.
Sure he can like he did in 2008 in theory but what about we the people? The comments have it right and prove one thing. The American people are the losers whether Obama wins or loses his reelection bid.
Obama will talk Roosevelt and act Reagan, like last time.
I think this article was written for a group of people whose political position is most accurately identified as "fucking retarded". That should have been a clue, Mr. McElvaine. A short but very accurate analysis of the group you seem to speak for.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CoqaNG0Ozqc
It was a reference to Rahm Emmanuel :-/ Btw, a bit off topic: I have a younger sister with Downs and most of my relatives (including my mother - imagine when she saw her after giving birth, she didn't need to be told the news) are actually pedagogues who teach people like her (don't know the word for this in English) so I know quite a few not-quite-normal people which is probably why I do not mince my words about them :-) The ones I know are dumb, have most of the vices and good sides of normal people and are really, really difficult to live with, but you just have to love them, no? Retarded or moron, mongoloid idiot or whatever you call them, I don't give a shit. This group of people really *is* different from you and I, and not just in skin colour or upbringing.
It seems you missed the point of the video.
I have no sound here, so I only saw the title and the youtube comments. Not that I think that a speech will change my opinion which is based on decades of real-life experience of actually living and working with people like my sister.
Edit: although on second thought I may be misunderestimating the offensiveness of the word itself, as I'm not a native speaker. People with Down syndrome are usually referred to as "idiots" or "mongoloid idiots" in Hungarian by most people, but special education communities have different words for them. Maybe I just move in the wrong circles, but I don't know anyone who gives a shit what these things are called. How these children are handled by others and communities is a different question altogether, I just don't have any sensibility towards names. But of course it's probably different in America.
Here in the USA it's considered a pejorative, kinda like the "R" version of the "N" word. Many people still find its use acceptable - grossly insensitive people - but we have as many of those here as anywhere else.
If you ever get a chance to watch the video with sound it is well worth watching.
Yeah of course, I was wrong, sorry about that and my pathetic excuses :-/ Would have been better if I'd said nothing. Thanks for the video.
You're welcome. :-)
_____________________________________
I only needed to read the headline, after which two points became exceedingly obvious:
(1) "I worked for FDR, and let me tell you, Obama is no Franklin Roosevelt".
(2) Why would anybody in their right mind want Obama "to win"?!
I, too, believe in individualism; but I mean it in everything that the word implies.
I believe that our industrial and economic system is made for individual men and women, and not individual men and women for the benefit of the system.
I believe that the individual should have full liberty of action to make the most of himself; but I do not believe that in the name of that sacred word a few powerful interests should be permitted to make industrial cannon fodder of the lives of half of the population of the United States.
I believe in the sacredness of private property, which means that I do not believe that it should be subjected to the ruthless manipulation of professional gamblers in the stock markets and in the corporate system.
I share the President's complaint against regimentation; but unlike him, I dislike it not only when it is carried on by an informal group, an unofficial group, amounting to an economic Government of the United States, but also when it is done by the Government of the United States itself.
I believe that the Government, without becoming a prying bureaucracy, can act as a check or counterbalance to this oligarchy so as to secure the chance to work and the safety of savings to men and women, rather than safety of exploitation to the exploiter, safety of manipulation to the financial manipulators, safety of unlicensed power to those who would speculate to the bitter end with the welfare and property of other people. FDR 8-20-32
Somehow I didn't think this article would be popular here :-) Today, I was reminded of the reality of hate, It is as if this is force- just waiting to manifest in a few or more than a few-triggered by a look, an innocent action. Always cowardly, but always destructive. Thinking of Obama-no matter what he does, the forces of hate are there-ready and waiting. Whether he is black, or brilliant, or handsome, or rich...it doesn't matter. If he had the moral authority of King- he would probably be hated even more- especially the King who railed against the Vietnam War.
Where am I going? Simply, that it takes courage, to be Obama. While I may not consider him highly principled, I wonder what it would be like to be in his shoes. It can't be easy. And at the risk of personal attack- he still towers over his Republican opponents-which may not be saying much- but I believe this.
He has very nice shoes.
I hate his shoes.
nice flip-flops too.
Yes- but could you fill them? :-)
You gonna vote for a War Criminal, a protector of the largest financial crimes in history, the signator of NDAA etc.? Wow what a sad, pathetic and belly-crawling state US "politics" is in. Don't worry, your man Obamney will be "re-elected". I expect to be leaving the country again - this time for good.
Normally I agree with many of your posts. Empathy is a qualitiy in short supply. But I would save it for the victims of war, those who are homeless and jobless and have been abandoned by Obama. As a person, Obama is a cipher. As soon as he was elected he embarked on a vigorous course of following his marching orders from the 1%, appointing Wall Street to all key positions. He has the military and CIA cross training. I could go on, He is much smarter and smoother in a surfacey way than his Republican opponents. But he is probably not torn up by conscience and is convinced that he is doing a great job.
LJG100
Finally, a reasonble voice....
It is not reasonable at all. To trash commentary on Obama by covering it with the all-encompassing and simple-minded blanket of "hate" is quite unreasonable, not to mention Limbaughish. "They hate America, blah, blah..."
How can you possibly respond to something like this? Obama loves me, yes I know ....
Your post used the word 'hate' three times more often than all the rest of the comments combined -- the one other place was someone mentioning he hated O's shoes. With all respect due, you have no clue what hate is, nor "innocent", nor "cowardly" or "destructive" and certainly not "courage".
Obama has done more damage to this country than any president in my lifetime, which spans nearly 3/4 of a century. He entered office with the greatest popular backing of any president. He could have accomplished anything. Instead, and here is his most disgraceful feat of all, he destroyed the real and honest hope of millions of people taking a chance on our corrupt political system for the first time and millions more giving it one more shot.
His "towering" is one a Bot fly has over a mosquito. And I apologize for insulting those insects.
We are in so much shit.
Whatsamatta witchyou Obama? Eleanor done showed you how it's done.
This article has one virtue. The comments.
a wheelchair?
When I voted for him in 2008 I hoped that Obama would be another FDR.
This hope lasted from November, 2008 to December, 2008.
It ain't gonna happen!
The only constituency Obama needs are the corporate plutocrats and the wall street oligarchs.
A most reasonable political analysis. Send it to the President, so he will have no one to blame if he loses. He has a a unique opportunity to begin the restoral of Democratic principle in the Governance of America. If he chooses otherwise he will lose. "Nothing is more powerful than an idea whose time has come". His administration is the product of America's yearning for change, he will respond to that yearning or it will replace him, no matter the consequence.
Agreed. Obama is worse than worthless and ainna gonna change.
No point in even debating that.
But just for the uplift of hearing what a halfway real People's President once said by way of roasting greed heads and plutocrats in the US, Google 'FDR's 1936 speech at Madison Square Garden.'
Listen to the live recording -- also findable via Google by using search term:
FDR speech --'.I welcome their hatred.'
We know now that the next President will be one of three people, President Obama, Newt Gingrich or Mitt Romney. Imagine, America, either one. I wonder what will be the nature of these comments if the highest elected official in America is President Gingrich or President Romney? You don't even get the chance to dream, The Corporate takeover of America will be seamless.
Transition Analyst:
Your post is the most rational in this whole emotion-venting thread.
The world is real, the election will have a real winner, and there will
be real consequences after January 20, 2013. I wonder whether real
people really want Willard to rule over them. By the way, the president
has real powers, especially insofar as he goes along with Republicans
in congress, and insofar as Democrats in congress remain ineffectual.
It will be real interesting to read what's posted after January 20 next
year.
Roosevelt did not abandon consensus and compromise. He simply extended it to include ALL the people, not just bankers, politicians and other economic royalists.
Forget it Robert, o is in it for the long haul to prop up the 1%. His ideals are purely money driven and getting reelected. And that is the prize the 1% will give o. The only difference is that the rethugs aren't doing it, yet.
Walter Lippman big time elitist! Please! What he says isn't worth the toilet paper it's written. He's so overrated. Let's not be silly. Yes, Franklin D Roosevelt chopped and changed as one documentary of his life said. He wasn't wedded to any doctrine. But he moved to the progressive side more and more. Did do enough to completely please Howard Zinn? No! But he sure did better than anyone else we've had in the White House in over 150 years. Now! He was also one of if not the first governors to push through any public assistance for the needy. That wasn't just a minor matter. Let's look at that when somebody comes up with some of this Monday morning quaterbacking. Meanwhile I'm writing the unauthorized biography of Winston Churchill. Deal with that.
I might want to write about Thomas Jefferson, but some would say I have no right to write about an ancestor even and maybe especially an illegitimate one-- thanks. Of course, I can't prove it. But then, a lot of Sally Hemming's descendants can't do so.
Hey, Professor, FDR reversed Hoover's policies in 100 fucking days, you idiot --- and this gutless and complicit shill of a faux-Emperor/president hasn't even had the balls to say anything near FDR's threats to the "economic royalists", "malefactors of great wealth", nor any of the trillion dollar Wall Street looters in THREE FUCKING YEARS --- let alone do a single friggin thing to stop them.
Who did you blow at CD, professor, to get your shit-for-brains article in here?
Best luck and love to the Occupy Empire revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy. justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire.
Alan
"if Obama were to stand up to big business ...."
.
Annnnnd cut. ... not worth wasting time on this kind of ridiculousness.
I think FDR went against the "economic royalists" because he was genuinely afraid that a revolution was going to happen if he didn't do something to show concern for the population which was openly talking about whether the existing form of government would be overthrown. When push came to shove in the thirties there were some of the 1 % who were willing to pay taxes and support the survival of the existing government and its constitution and there were some of the 1% who were not damn the consequences. That division exists today among the 1 percent. Those who want the government to survive support Obama and the other faction, mostly Republican want to create a directly fascist state. But whoever is elected President will do the will of the part of the 1% that supports him. Presidents, like the Supreme Court, the Senate and most of the House have never been of or for the 99%. Surprised? That's the charade of American Politics, Democrat or Republican--how to appear to be of the people while furthering the interests of their true patrons-- one side or the other of the 1%. Don't worry about doing the will of the people, the people's will is pitifully easy to manufacture. If the fascist side wins for example, it will say that this is the will of the people-- and they wil be right.
I'd give credit to Huey Long who had the ideas and conviction long before FDR made it to the Oval office and then picked up on his ideas.
tammons, good point --- we could have overt fascists or "Friendly Fascism" [Bertram Gross].
I guess you could say that this is the choice you wind-up with when a population spends three decades voting for the so-called "least worst".
We get two flavors, or two brands, of fascism.
Wow. Great! "Can I get mine supersized, pleeeeze"?
God save us all, tammons.
Best to your and yours,
Alan
Obama is a lying sack of shit and Republicans are the devil's spawn. I may be voting for Ron Paul. We may need legalized drugs and prostitutes to get through this.